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PARIS – So, Los Angeles, how do you top that?

Now that the spectacular 2024 Summer Olympic Games have come to an end, the Olympic world turns its eyes to a very familiar host city for the 2028 Games, America’s Olympic city, Los Angeles.

LA will become the third city in the world to host three Olympics when the Summer Games come to Southern California from July 14 to July 30, 2028. The first time was in 1932 and the second was in 1984 when Los Angeles saved the day by hosting when no other city or nation wanted to, turning a huge profit that funneled millions into youth sports in the city and kicking off an era of tremendous Olympic success that has lasted 40 years. 

So a city and a region with such a remarkable Olympic resume is hardly daunted by following the majestic visual feast that Paris presented to the world over the past 17 days.

“Our job is to be the most authentically spectacular Games for LA, not to try and out-Paris Paris in LA,” Casey Wasserman, president of the 2028 Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee, said in an interview here this week. “One of the reasons Paris has been so successful is they’ve been authentically French in every regard and that’s why it works. LA is a different city and so we have to be what you would expect and what you see and what people are used to seeing from big events in LA.”

In other words: Hollywood, the beaches, the ocean, the mountains, sunshine, celebrities, the works.

This conversation of “can you top this” has happened once before, with a sublime result for the subsequent Olympics. As soon as the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing ended, talk turned to London in 2012, and it went something like this: Poor London, how could it possibly follow the technical opulence and grandeur of a country like China that could put on the biggest show on earth with no concern for the guardrails of tight budgets, media scrutiny and, well, democracy. 

“In the Beijing opening ceremony, there were, whatever, 10,000 people banging drums,” Wasserman said. “Then London does a great thing because it was authentically British, it had humor and fun and music and all this stuff and the Queen and Daniel Craig. 

“Our job is not to compare but to be the best for LA. I think it’s important not to get caught up in that, the same way London frankly didn’t get caught up in that.”

One big change from Paris to LA will be a return to a stadium for the opening ceremony, which means the athletes of the world will receive the kind of raucous ovation in 2028 that was just not possible as they cruised the Seine River here.

Wasserman praised Paris’ incredible opening ceremony. “It was so spectacular,” he said. “I give them a ton of credit. … Beautiful idea.” 

But it was missing something. 

“The way I describe it is the one thing it missed was shared experiences,” Wasserman said. “So not just for the athletes, for the fans, you have the moment of, oh, Paul McCartney playing in London, everyone shared that moment at the same time, and here when it was coming down the river, you had your experience, but it was a very isolated experience for both the athletes and the fans. If you were on the river you saw what you saw but that’s all you saw.” 

In that sense, for spectators gathered along the Seine that night, it was like watching a parade. The greatest parade ever, but still a parade.

“The energy that comes from a shared experience – Super Bowl halftime is the ultimate example, Super Bowl halftime being in the venue, everyone experiences it together,” he said. “I think that’s a really important thing to create that energy and I think it’s a really great opportunity for the athletes to feel that energy because it is the first night and that energy and that shared experience is pretty powerful.”

Olympic gold medalist Donna de Varona, a member of the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee board of directors who also was on the LA Olympic bid committee, said it is vital to put the athletes first.

“We will put the athletes center stage,” she said in an interview here the other day. “We need to do that. I commend the French for going all out. It was a nice idea to use the Seine but the athletes were separate. 

“I’m sure because all these stars came here it was really helpful on social media and it helps elevate the Games, but we still have to remember that the athletes are the stars of the show,” she said. “The athletes have to be the centerpiece and that’s the challenge of the countries marching in. There are all kinds of ways we can make that happen. 

“Here, I think the only disappointment was that the athletes were not center stage in the opening ceremony. In LA, Hollywood will step up, but we don’t want Hollywood to overshadow the athletes. The athletes are the stars of the show.” 

One athlete who was a star of the show here spoke enthusiastically about looking forward to a home game in LA in what would be her fifth Olympic Games. Katie Ledecky, the most decorated U.S. female Olympian ever, in any sport, was one of many athletes who appreciated the boisterous and delightful ovations every French athlete received here, win, lose, or draw.  

“Seeing the kind of support that the French athletes are getting here, I think all of the U.S. athletes are thinking about how cool that could be in Los Angeles having the home crowd,” she said. “So that would be amazing to be able to compete there.”

When one Olympics ends, the promise of the next begins. Paris is done. On to LA.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Democrats have continued to push a vulgar falsehood about former President Trump’s running mate Sen. JD Vance, R-Ohio, despite the claim being debunked weeks ago.

‘It undermines their moralizing about Trump’s falsehoods and gives Trump an opportunity to say it’s ‘the pot calling the kettle black,’’ Democratic strategist Julian Epstein told Fox News Digital.

Epstein’s comment comes as Democrats show no signs of ditching the Vance ‘couch meme,’ a vulgar rumor that originated on social media last month that Trump’s running mate described a sex act he performed on a couch in his 2016 memoir, ‘Hillbilly Elegy.’

Despite the claim being quickly debunked, its viral spread was picked up by Democrats and spawned jokes and memes across social media.

The falsehood even made its way to the top of the Democratic ticket, with Vice President Kamala Harris’ running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, cracking a joke about the rumor during a speech in Philadelphia the same day Harris announced he was joining the ticket.

‘I got to tell you, I can’t wait to debate [Vance]. That is if — if he’s willing to get off the couch and show up,’ Walz said during the remarks as Harris smirked behind him, according to a recounting of the event on NBC News. ‘You see what I did there?’

The moment went viral on the Harris campaign’s TikTok account, named Kamala HQ, garnering 5.3 million views, NBC reported, noting that Democrats have continued to use the joke despite the release of fact-checks debunking the rumor by several media outlets.

In one such example, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee sent a news release on July 26 targeting Trump’s decision to pick Vance, joking that Republicans are ‘couching their public praise of Trump’s vice presidential nominee with private criticism.’

On July 27, the Kamala HQ X account shared a screenshot of Vance’s moments on ‘cat ladies’ with the caption that the Ohio senator ‘does not couch his hatred for women.’

A day later, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, long believed to be a potential candidate to join Harris on the ticket, joked on ABC News that while Trump ‘talks about all kinds of crazy stuff,’ Vance is ‘getting known for his obsession with couches.’

Rep. Jared Moskowitz, D-Fla., has also leaned into the joke, responding to Vance’s post asking why Harris had not been taking questions from the media.

‘I’ve been on Air Force 2 JD, there is a great couch on it,’ Moskowitz said in an August 7 post on X.

The continued veiled jabs at Vance over a debunked rumor seemingly fly in the face of one of the main Democratic criticisms of Trump, who the party has long claimed peddled misinformation and false claims for political benefit.

That criticism of Trump took center stage during the 2016 Democratic National Convention, when then-first lady Michelle Obama famously declare ‘when they go low, we go high,’ in reference to the attacks on her and her family.

‘More than anything else, Democrats want to memory-hole the Biden/Harris record of the last four years. They want to memory-hole Harris’ fringe left views from just five years ago.’

Obama doubled down on the theme during the 2020 convention in support of President Biden, declaring that ‘going high is the only thing that works.’

Moskowitz has nevertheless defended his party’s apparent double standard, arguing on social media that continuing the spread of the rumor is just jokes and does not compare to the lies spread by Trump.

‘For 2 years we had to hear that Joe Biden was an international super criminal mastermind from Despicable Me 3. You will listen to couch story,’ he said last month.

Moskowitz’s office did not immediately respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment.

However, Epstein believes Democrats are making a ‘mistake’ by continuing to lean into the falsehood, though she argued getting into a ‘tit for tat campaign of insult comedy’ would also be a ‘trap for the Republicans.’

‘More than anything else, Democrats want to memory-hole the Biden/Harris record of the last four years,’ Epstein said. ‘They want to memory-hole Harris’ fringe left views from just five years ago.’

The Harris campaign did not immediately respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

In this StockCharts TV video, Mary Ellen dives into her broad market analysis, sharing what she needs to see before it’s safe to get back in. She also shares her top candidates for once the markets turn positive, including META, LLY and NFLX. She finishes up by sharing best practices to setting up your stock watchlist.

This video originally premiered August 12, 2024. You can watch it on our dedicated page for Mary Ellen on StockCharts TV.

New videos from Mary Ellen premiere weekly on Fridays. You can view all previously recorded episodes at this link.

If you’re looking for stocks to invest in, be sure to check out the MEM Edge Report! This report gives you detailed information on the top sectors, industries and stocks so you can make informed investment decisions.

Mortgage Rates fell quite a bit this past week and no one is really talking about it. One area that we will want to watch closely as rates fall is Real Estate (XLRE). This sector has already been moving in the right direction. It now has an opportunity to rally further.

Carl also talked about Japan today and the fall of the Nikkei last week. He discusses why it happened, what the results were and what this might mean for our markets.

Carl opens the show with his view of our signal tables and a discussion on how much they have changed since the beginning of August. We are seeing lots of flips to red.

The market has now formed a reverse pennant formation. Carl and Erin discuss the implications which does keep a bear market in the background. He also covers major asset classes like Crude Oil, the Dollar and Gold.

Erin takes us inside the Real Estate sector as well as looks at broad market participation revealed by the NYSE and SP600 (IJR) participation. Growth sectors seems to be recuperating somewhat, but defensive areas of the market are still showing positive momentum.

The pair finish the show with a review of viewers symbol requests.

01:00 DP Signal Tables

04:11 Market Overview

07:44 Mortgage Rates

10:51 Magnificent Seven

15:47 Bank of Japan and Nikkei

24:10 Sector Rotation & Broad Market Participation

35:45 Symbol Requests

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Good morning and welcome to this week’s Flight Path. Equities remained in a “NoGo” trend this past week however after gapping lower on Monday, prices rallied until on Friday GoNoGo Trend painted a weaker pink bar. Treasury bond prices painted weaker aqua “Go” bars as the trend remained in place. U.S. commodity index hung on to its “NoGo” trend with a pink bar at the end of the week. The dollar also remained in a “NoGo” trend painting weaker pink bars.

$SPY Rallies but Not Yet Out of “NoGo”

Price gapped lower again on Monday, but then steadily climbed all week. The weight of the evidence tells us that the trend is still a “NoGo” however the indicator is painting a weaker pink bar. GoNoGo Oscillator is testing the zero level from below and volume is heavy. We will watch to see if the oscillator gets turned away, back into negative territory. If it does, the “NoGo” trend is likely to continue.

The strong rally this week put the weekly close very close to the previous close. A third aqua “Go” bar tells us that the trend remains week on this longer term chart, however, the “Go” survives again this week. We will continue to monitor the GoNoGo Oscillator as it rests at zero. If it can find support here, then we may see the “Go” trend remain in place. Multi time frame analysis tells us to keep this chart in mind when we look at the lower timeframes.

Treasury Rates Rally off Lows 

This week we saw another low for treasury rates. Then, price rallied strongly all week. GoNoGo Trend begin to paint weaker pink “NoGo” bars mid week as prices climbed. GoNoGo Oscillator rallied to test the zero level from below and was quickly rejected. This tells us that momentum is resurgent in the direction of the “NoGo” trend. We will look to see if price moves back lower this week.

The weekly chart below shows that the support we saw on the chart last week held. Price dipped below the horizontal level but the weekly close was back above it. GoNoGo Oscillator has also rallied out of oversold territory but is still negative.

The Dollar’s “NoGo” Trend Remains

Price moved sharply lower a week ago. We then saw prices climb from those lows as the week progressed. However, GoNoGo Trend shows that the “NoGo” survived the week on weaker pink bars as the rally stalled. GoNoGo Oscillator rallied quickly to test the zero line from below but was rejected on heavy volume. This tells us that momentum is resurgent in the direction of the “NoGo” trend and so we will look for price to fall this week.

The Dallas Cowboys and CeeDee Lamb aren’t making much progress on a new contract, but team owner Jerry Jones did have a message Sunday for the All-Pro wide receiver: ‘CeeDee, you’re missed.’

Speaking on the pregame show for the Cowboys’ preseason opener against the Los Angeles Rams, Jones expounded on his comments last week that the team ‘doesn’t have a sense of urgency’ to get Lamb signed to a contract extension.

While acknowledging ‘the angst that’s happening,’ as Lamb continues to accrue fines for missing training camp, Jones remained firm in his negotiating stance. ‘But you’re not missed out here competing and it doesn’t put any pressure any place on us.’

Still playing on his rookie deal, the fifth-year veteran is seeking a new contract that would make him one of the NFL’s highest-paid wide receivers. Several other wideouts have already signed lucrative deals this offseason ‒ with the Minnesota Vikings’ Justin Jefferson topping out on a four-year, $140 million pact.

Lamb also skipped the team’s voluntary offseason program and its mandatory June minicamp. He could face fines of nearly $1 million, though they can be rescinded at the team’s discretion.

All things Cowboys: Latest Dallas Cowboys news, schedule, roster, stats, injury updates and more.

Lamb had the best season of his career in 2023, leading the NFL with 135 receptions, while amassing 1,749 receiving yards and 12 touchdowns.

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

PARIS — The American women won their eighth consecutive basketball gold medal Sunday with a 67-66 win over France. It is an unprecedented achievement in Olympic team sports, and a dynasty that doesn’t get nearly enough attention across the sports landscape. 

Of course, everyone’s next question is going to be: Can they keep the streak going in 2028 when the U.S. hosts the Summer Games for the first time since 1996? The pressure will be on in Los Angeles — not that that’s anything new for USA Basketball. 

Still, it made us wonder: Who’s going to be on the 2028 women’s Olympic basketball team? Age isn’t the deterrent it used to be — you’ve probably heard that the U.S. women’s and men’s teams featured a 42- and 39-year-old — so this is a tougher exercise than usual. 

Still, it’s fun to think about how much more the women’s game is going to grow and improve both across the U.S. and internationally. With that in mind, here are the contenders for the 2028 Olympic women’s basketball roster:

The 2024 holdovers 

A’ja Wilson

2024 Paris Olympics: Follow USA TODAY’s coverage of the biggest names and stories of the Games.

She’s the best player in the world on both ends of the floor and just now entering her prime. Wilson’s ability to control every possession both offensively and defensively is a thing of beauty — and it’s scary to think how much better she could be in four years, especially as she develops more of a perimeter game. 

Breanna Stewart 

If Wilson is ranked 1A in the world, Stewart is 1B. This is her and Wilson’s program now, and her ability to score on any defender at will continues to separate her from other dynamic athletes in women’s basketball. 

Napheesa Collier

Collier excels on the block and in the mid-range game but has the shot to step out, giving her a versatility that fits the international game well. Just 27 years old in Paris, she is likely to be an WNBA MVP contender the next few years. 

Sabrina Ionescu 

The 2024 Olympics are a passing of the baton of sorts for point guards in the USA Basketball system, as Ionescu learns from Chelsea Gray, the best point guard in women’s basketball. Ionescu’s value will come with her experience, basketball IQ and deep shooting ability (coach Cheryl Reeve would also want everyone to note Ionescu’s improvement defensively.) 

Jackie Young

Young is a terrific two-way player and one of the best defenders in the world. She’s also one of the strongest players in the WNBA, which gives her a huge advantage on the floor. 

The Olympic rookie locks

Caitlin Clark

Great shooters are always an asset during international competition because of their ability to stretch the floor. Clark’s logo 3s will fit in perfectly, and she’ll be stronger after four years in the pros, which means she won’t get knocked around so much (international ball is famously physical). 

Paige Bueckers

Outside of Chelsea Gray, the 2024 Olympic team doesn’t really have a true facilitator. This is where the highly efficient Bueckers will shine. 

JuJu Watkins

The likely No. 1 pick in the 2027 WNBA Draft, Watkins already has one of the best midrange games in women’s basketball, regardless of level. That, coupled with her size, will make her transition to the pros and FIBA smoother than most guards. 

Our money is on them

Cameron Brink

Brink was supposed to make her Olympic debut in Paris at 3×3, but a torn ACL in late June sidelined her. The best two-way player in the 2024 draft, Brink can score and defend with top forwards already, and she loves physical play. She’ll fit right in. 

Angel Reese

Reese is a rebounding machine in the WNBA so far, and her play has turned heads. The only catch is that if she never goes overseas in the winter — which she has said she doesn’t really want to do — she could face a major adjustment with the physical play, to the point that the selection committee might be hesitant to put her on the roster. 

Aliyah Boston

The 2023 Rookie of the Year had a rough start to her sophomore season in the WNBA but it’s likely that in four years, she is one of the best, and most consistent, forwards in women’s basketball. 

The question marks

Kelsey Plum

Plum can play point or off guard, score from either position and knows how to play with superstars. She’ll be 33 when 2028 rolls around. Her inclusion likely comes down to if she wants whether to play in another Olympics. 

Jewell Loyd

Loyd is one of the best pure scorers in the WNBA, but she didn’t get many minutes in Paris and therefore, hadn’t done much. Her inclusion on the 2028 roster might come down to who’s coaching and what type of system they run. 

Arikea Ogunbowale 

The best one-on-one player in the WNBA, Ogunbowale is a gifted shot maker who has torched Team USA at back-to-back WNBA All-Star games, scoring 26 in 2021 before Tokyo and 34 this summer before Paris. In June she said she took her name out of the 2024 USA Basketball pool months ago because of the “politics” surrounding roster selection, saying it “doesn’t have much to do with your game.” Does she want back in before LA? 

Rhyne Howard

There’s an argument that 3×3 is a stepping stone of sorts to 5-on-5; we saw as much with Plum and Young, who won 3×3 gold in Tokyo and then graduated to 5-on-5. Is Howard the next to make that jump?

The wild card

Diana Taurasi

The elder stateswoman of USA Basketball right now, Taurasi will be 46 when the Los Angeles Games tip off in four years. It seems crazy to think she could still be playing … but LA is her hometown and until this woman actually retires and is sitting in the stands instead of on the bench, don’t rule out anything.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The San Diego Padres may not cool off until they catch the Los Angeles Dodgers. And Jackson Merrill may not stop slugging crucial homers until he runs down Paul Skenes.

The Padres continued their second-half rampage this week, going 5-1 on a road trip to Pittsburgh and Miami to make it 16 wins in 20 games since the All-Star break. They’re now within 3 ½ games of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL West – and moved up three more spots in USA TODAY Sports’ power rankings.

It all wouldn’t be possible without Merrill, the rookie who switched from shortstop to center field on Opening Day and hasn’t looked back. Merrill, who turned 21 in April, hit game-tying home runs in the eighth and ninth innings in consecutive games to fuel comeback wins over the Marlins. He now has five game-tying or go-ahead homers in the eighth inning or later this season, tying Mel Ott and trailing only Frank Robinson for players 21 or younger.

With 3.0 WAR, 17 homers and an .814 OPS, he can certainly challenge Skenes, the Pirates rookie flamethrower who debuted in May, for top NL rookie honors. Just as the Padres continue rising the charts.

A look at our updated rankings:

Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.

1. Baltimore Orioles (+1)

Jackson Holliday youngest player ever to homer in three straight games.

2. New York Yankees (+2)

Starter Clarke Schmidt, out since May 26, says he’ll be back by end of month.

3. Philadelphia Phillies (-)

J.T. Realmuto hits first home run since May.

4. Cleveland Guardians (-3)

Nine-game lead on June 25 whittled to 1 ½ before restoring order in Minnesota.

5. Los Angeles Dodgers (+1)

River Ryan, who’d posted a 1.33 ERA in four starts, latest starter to succumb to injury bug.

6. Milwaukee Brewers (-1)

Reached a season-high 18 games over .500, bidding for No. 2 seed in NL.

7. Minnesota Twins (-)

Just as they close in on division lead, starter Joe Ryan likely lost for season.

8. San Diego Padres (+3)

Lead majors with .265 average – something they’ve never done, even in the Tony Gwynn era..

9. Kansas City Royals (-)

Moving Week: Three games against Twins to gain ground in standings, season series.

10. Arizona Diamondbacks (+2)

Unbeaten in last 11 series, dating back to late June.

11. Houston Astros (+2)

.Spencer Arrighetti punching out 11.1 batters per nine innings

12. Boston Red Sox (-2)

Reliever Liam Hendriks nearing a rehab assignment.

13. Atlanta Braves (-6)

Pretty big four-game set coming up in San Francisco.

14. Seattle Mariners (-)

Managed a 9-8 record during Julio Rodriguez’s absence.

15. New York Mets (-)

Offense needs to get its groove back in six games against A’s, Marlins.

16. San Francisco Giants (+3)

Blake Snell’s no-hitter kick-started a 7-2 rampage.

17. St. Louis Cardinals (-1)

Andre Pallante has allowed two or fewer earned runs in seven of his 12 starts.

18. Tampa Bay Rays (-1)

Zach Eflin came back to the Trop and beat them, but at least they put a skate park in left field.

19. Chicago Cubs (+4)

100 caps or 1,000 hits? Oh, those Swanson dinner-table debates.

20. Pittsburgh Pirates (-2)

Paul Skenes merely human in three starts since All-Star break – 3.16 ERA, seven walks in 25 ⅔ IP.

21. Texas Rangers (-1)

Max Scherzer already on IL and now concern over Nathan Eovaldi’s right side.

22. Cincinnati Reds (-1)

Dropped back into rotation, Nick Martinez responds with 12 scoreless innings over two starts.

23. Detroit Tigers (-1)

Held to three or fewer runs in 12 of last 18 games.

24. Toronto Blue Jays (+1)

Joey Loperfido 4 for his first 32 since trade from Houston.

25. Washington Nationals (-1)

MacKenzie Gore has completely lost the strike zone: 23 walks in his last 29 ⅓ innings pitched.

26. Los Angeles Angels (-)

Jack Kochanowicz gets first major league win in third career start.

27. Oakland Athletics (-)

Fiftieth win matches entire total for 2023.

28. Miami Marlins (-)

Jake Burger has majors-best 12 home runs since All-Star break.

29. Colorado Rockies (-)

Brenton Doyle tops 20-20 mark; is 30-30 season in offing?

30. Chicago White Sox (-)

Ex-manager Pedro Grifol will make more ($1 million) in 2025 than 17 of their 26 currently active players.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The University of Colorado has finalized an agreement with Deion Sanders’ business manager that spells out the terms for filming another season of the “Coach Prime” documentary series on the university’s Boulder campus.

The contract was finalized in late July after Amazon Prime Video announced the renewal of the series in May. It details the agreement between the university and SMAC Productions, a division of SMAC Entertainment, a talent agency based in Los Angeles. SMAC’s business clients include Sanders, Colorado’s football coach, and three players on his team − two-way star Travis Hunter and Sanders’ sons Shedeur and Shilo.

“We were extremely happy with how the last season of the Coach Prime docuseries turned out and are looking forward to working with SMAC on what promises to be another great season,” university spokesman Steve Hurlbert said.

USA TODAY Sports recently obtained the contract, which is unusual in the sense that few college coaches could procure this arrangement – an annual series on Prime Video, produced by his business manager, with wide latitude to film on campus at no charge.

The university sees it as a good deal, in large part because of the publicity it brings as it documents the Colorado football program behind the scenes under Sanders, also known as Coach Prime.

What is in the Deion Sanders filming contract?

The contract is mostly the same as last year’s, which covered Sanders’ first season at Colorado. It was signed by Sanders’ business manager, Constance Schwartz-Morini, CEO of SMAC Entertainment, along with CU administrator Patrick O’Rourke.

∎ The contract again includes no compensation for the university, which instead sees the publicity from the series as its own form of compensation. By contrast, Michigan received $2.25 million for access and licensing in relation to its behind-the-scenes show on Amazon for the 2017 season.

 Amazon Prime Video declined to share viewership data for the last season of “Coach Prime.”

∎ SMAC Productions maintains editorial control of the series, with regular input from the university on the series’ content.

“All creative and business decisions in connection with the Series shall be under the sole control of Producer subject only to Producer’s compliance with its express obligations and restrictions set forth herein,” the contract states.

∎ As producer, SMAC Productions is responsible for securing “any and all media releases from any CU Individuals or other individuals who are featured, photographed, filmed or otherwise recorded for the production of the Series.”

∎ The producer has wide latitude for filming on campus. “Producer is hereby irrevocably granted permission to enter and use, film, photograph and record the athletic buildings and facilities of the CU including, without limitation, the CU’s football stadium, practice areas, weight rooms, locker rooms, team meeting rooms, fields, sideline areas, and all other restricted and unrestricted locations within and around the same,” the contract states.

∎ SMAC also has exclusive rights to CU for all television, documentary and episodic programming in all media for any commercial project featuring both Sanders and the CU Football program that might compete with the series until 12 months after the airing of the final episode. This doesn’t include rights to CU games but says CU needs Sanders’ prior written consent to “create its own short-form, non-serialized audiovisual content about CU which contains references to Sanders and CU Football.”

The university said it does not have any such agreements with Sanders, however.

How long will the ‘Coach Prime’ series run?

The contract states it is CU’s intent to positively collaborate with the producer “to allow production of the Series on the CU campus for the duration of Sanders employment relationship with CU.”

But the CU chancellor may decline to extend the filming of the series on the CU campus beyond the 2024 season. The parties agree to meet to discuss an option to extend the agreement on or about April 1, 2025.

Last year’s series was Season 2 of “Coach Prime” and debuted after Sanders’ first season in Boulder, when the Buffaloes finished 4-8 after starting 3-0. It consisted of six episodes and followed Season 1, which covered Sanders’ final year at Jackson State before his hiring in Boulder.

“The partnership with CU and SMAC worked very well last year for all parties so we all felt there was little need to make any drastic changes ahead of this season,” Hurlbert said.

Colorado currently is engaged in preseason practices and begins the season Aug. 29 at home against North Dakota State.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Republicans have a favorable map, but Democratic candidates are on top in several battleground states. It is anyone’s game in the first Fox News Power Rankings for the Senate this cycle.

If you know one fact about the 1984 presidential election, it’s that Ronald Reagan won in a landslide. With wins in 49 states and a total of 525 electoral college votes, no candidate has ever pulled off a larger victory.

You might not remember that in the same election, Republicans lost two Senate seats, leaving them with a total of just 53 in the upper chamber.

Outcomes like these used to be normal. Voters have opted for different party winners in more than a hundred races with a presidential and senate election on the same ballot in the postwar era, with the practice reaching its peak in the 1970s and 1980s.

Today, voters are much more loyal to their party. In the last presidential cycle, the electorate only chose different party winners in one out of the 35 states with presidential and senate races (Maine, where Susan Collins held on for a fifth term).

Calculated another way, Democratic and Republican senate candidate vote-shares each differed from the top of the ticket by an average of 2.4 points.

The outcome of the presidential race will therefore heavily influence the result of most of the 34 senate seats up for election this year. In fact, the Power Rankings have the same party winning the presidential and senate races in every state where one party has an edge in both forecasts. 

However, the exceptions to this rule will determine who takes control of the upper chamber.

Republicans are chasing wins in two Trump-leaning states that have held on to moderate Democratic incumbents.

Nearby, a handful of Democratic candidates have been outperforming their presidential counterpart, even after the party’s last-minute candidate switch.

The performance of the top of the ticket will be important in those races, but candidate quality, efficient campaigning and a message targeted to local voters will make all the difference.

The Reagan era can feel long forgotten in America. This year, we find out if ticket splitting is a distant memory too.

Republicans have a head start on their road to a Senate majority thanks to a favorable map. The GOP has a clear advantage in all the seats they will defend this year, whereas Democrats must defend eight seats that are hotly contested.

Democrats will also kick off the night with a very likely loss in West Virginia. 

The seat is currently held by Sen. Joe Manchin, who decided not to run for re-election earlier this year. The senator’s enduring relationship with West Virginians helped him eke out a 3-point win in 2018, but with Trump’s nearly 39-point win in the last presidential race, this is deep red territory. Democrats needed Manchin on the ballot to put up a good fight.

That victory alone would give Republicans 50 senate seats, or one short of a majority. (If Trump wins the presidential race, the GOP would rule the senate even without a majority because the Vice President breaks ties.)

To guarantee control, Republicans are looking for victories in Montana and Ohio.

Some of the dynamics in these races are similar to West Virginia. In 2020, Trump won Montana by 16 points and Ohio by 8 points. Two years earlier, Democratic incumbent Sens. Jon Tester and Sherrod Brown won the same states by nearly four and seven points, respectively.

Republicans are optimistic that victories in both races are within reach. Tester and Brown have mostly voted in line with the Biden administration’s priorities, and the GOP has fielded capable candidates in both states, including retired Navy SEAL Tim Sheehy in Montana and businessman Bernie Moreno in Ohio.

At the same time, the Democrats’ sitting senators have bucked their party on the items that matter most to their voters. Tester is a key proponent of the Keystone XL pipeline, for example, and Brown has pushed his party to support more tariffs on Chinese imports.

Montana and Ohio are toss-ups.

Despite a challenging Senate map, Democrats have been buoyed by strong polling in most of the seats they are defending. 

That includes Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, three famously swingy rust belt states at the heart of the presidential race. Recent Fox News surveys for each of these three races show more than 50% of voters supporting the Democratic candidate.

In Michigan, congresswoman and former CIA analyst Elissa Slotkin (D) is ahead of former congressman and former FBI agent Mike Rogers (R) by a 51-46% margin, or five points.
In Pennsylvania, third term Sen. Bob Casey (D) leads businessman and Bush administration official Dave McCormick (R) by a 55-42% margin, or 13 points.
In Wisconsin, second-term senator and presumptive nominee Tammy Baldwin (D) leads banker and likely nominee Eric Hovde (R) by a 54-43% margin, or 11 points (Wisconsin’s primary takes place tomorrow).

Slotkin, Casey and Baldwin are all experienced politicians. They are running well-funded campaigns and hoping that focusing on local issues like infrastructure, child safety and health care funding will get them over the line.

These races are far from settled. Republicans will look to build more name awareness for their candidates as their races heat up, and hope to remind voters that their opponents have been supportive of the Biden administration’s economic and immigration policies.

However, these polling leads give the Democrats an advantage today. Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin’s senate races are rated Lean D. 

In the southwest, Republican and former local news anchor Kari Lake is running her second statewide race in Arizona after an unsuccessful bid for governor in 2022. 

Lake ran very close in that election, but her 17,117 vote loss was nearly double that of former President Trump’s in 2020, and in the 2022 Fox News Voter Analysis, she ran 28 points behind her Democratic opponent with independents.

This time, she faces Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-AZ-3), an Iraq War veteran, progressive and critic of retiring independent Sen. Kyrsten Sinema. With the border a top issue, Lake and allies have hit Gallego on his support for sanctuary cities, among other liberal immigration policies.

Gallego has an edge on Lake in recent polls and more than triple her cash on hand. A strong Trump showing in Arizona may be enough to give Lake a victory, but this race begins at Lean D.

The most competitive swing state race is in Nevada, where Democratic incumbent Jacky Rosen is seeking a second term. She is up against Republican and Afghanistan War veteran Sam Brown.

Rosen is running the same kind of small target campaign as her fellow incumbents in the rust belt, while Brown is leaning on his military experience and a Trump endorsement.

Nevada is one of the closest states on the board in the presidential race, and neither candidate has a consistent polling lead. Rosen ended June with triple Brown’s cash on hand, but that is not enough to give an edge to either party yet. This race is a toss-up.

In the races discussed in this forecast so far, Republicans are chasing wins in either very competitive or right-leaning presidential states.

In Maryland, the GOP is looking for an upset in deep blue territory.

The Old Line State voted for President Biden over Trump by a whopping 33 points in 2020, and its high proportion of Black voters and college-educated voters gives Democrats an advantage right out of the gate.

If anyone can challenge this script, it is former Governor Larry Hogan. 

Hogan governed as a moderate and a Trump skeptic in his eight years in office. That is the recipe the GOP needs for a shot here, and so far, voters say they like Hogan. He started the race with a 64% favorable rating among Maryland registered voters.

The challenge will be convincing Democratic voters who liked Hogan for governor that they should back him in the Senate too. Pro-Roe and anti-Trump positioning will help him with moderates, just as Trump’s surprise endorsement will keep rancor among ‘MAGA’ voters at bay.

Democrats still have an edge. Not only is the electoral math in their favor, but candidate Angela Alsobrooks has raised more money and is leaning effectively on her experience as a county executive and prosecutor. 

Endorsements from Vice President Harris and the Washington Post will be helpful. Maryland starts at Lean D.

Power Rankings mania continues tomorrow with the first U.S. House forecast. Check back here and watch America’s Newsroom to see predictions for all 435 districts.

On Wednesday, come back again for a first look at the 11 governor’s races up for grabs in 2024. An all-new Power Rankings Issues Tracker caps off the week as Democracy 24 special coverage for the Democratic National Convention begins.

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